Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Personal Finance News Tuesday 4/30

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

5 Critical Budgeting Mistakes to Avoid




While there's no simple formula for creating a household budget, there are some basic guidelines you can follow to maintain a realistic and accurate monthly spending plan. If you're tired of worrying about money--or just can't seem to meet your savings goals--you'll want to design a budget that accommodates your lifestyle. Avoiding these common budgeting mistakes will make it easier to keep your finances in check and stress less about money matters each month:

1. Setting budget that's too rigid. Most of your expenses likely fluctuate from month to month, so avoid making the mistake of setting a budget that's too strict. For instance, you might spend more over Fourth of July weekend or during the winter holiday season. An inflexible budget will not only make it difficult to save money but could inhibit your ability to maintain an accurate perspective on your finances. Consequently, it's crucial to leave some room to accommodate for unforeseen expenses.



To read the entire article from Sabah Karimi | U.S.News & World Report LP:
http://news.yahoo.com/5-critical-budgeting-mistakes-avoid-145625629.html







Monday, April 29, 2013

Personal Finance News Monday 4/29

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Building Wealth: Best Moves If You're 45 to 54

By Carla Fried, Paul J. Lim, Ismat Sarah Mangla, Donna Rosato and Penelope Wang | CNNMoney.com 

Money magazine's Ways to Build Wealth package offers blueprints for the different stages of your life on how to achieve real financial security. Here, we offer advice for 45- to 54-year-olds.

Start saving for future expenses

During your peak earning years, you need to ramp up your retirement savings and fight the instinct to spend it.

-- Look into your future. Don't let your energy flag now.

To stay motivated to save, envision yourself in 20 or 30 years. Researchers Daniel Bartels of Columbia University and Oleg Urminsky of the University of Chicago found that people who feel connected to their future self are more willing to wait for a reward.

You can create an aged picture of yourself at Merrill Edge's FaceRetirement.com.

-- Expect to splurge. In one test, people spent 79% more on special outlays like birthdays than they had forecast.

The study, by Abigail Sussman of Princeton and Adam Alter of New York University, found ordinary costs easier to predict. Create an "extras" category in your budget.

Turn a max salary into max savings


When you're making the most, squirrel away the most. Some 40% of successful savers -- those who built nest eggs equivalent to 10 times pay -- did so by saving 15% of their incomes or more for at least 10 years, a study by Hearts & Wallets found. Here's how:

To read the entire article from Carla Fried, Paul J. Lim, Ismat Sarah Mangla, Donna Rosato and Penelope Wang | CNNMoney.com:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/building-wealth--best-moves-if-you-re-45-to-54-160616540.html

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
Great spirits have always faced violent opposition from mediocre minds. -Einstein

Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com


Saturday, April 27, 2013

Personal Finance News Saturday 4/27

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Best Online Money-Management Tools


As the economy continues to sputter—along with the balance sheets of many families—the Internet has supplied an abundance of online tools to help repair the damage. Competition has been fierce, and many promising sites, including a few that we’ve recommended in the past, have bowed out of the budgeting game. 

SEE ALSO: Which Budgeting Site Is Best for You?

From that first crop of contenders, Mint.com remains the best overall money-management site. Not only has it survived, it’s earned a powerful sponsor: Intuit acquired Mint in 2009, two years after it launched. Since then, it has gained the confidence of the mainstream and multiplied its number of users by a factor of seven, to 10 million.

Read more at http://www.kiplinger.com/article/spending/T057-C000-S002-best-online-money-management-tools.html#zTbdfC6TrLUEHH6X.99


Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
One important key to success is self-confidence. An important key to self-confidence is preparation. - Arthur Ashe


Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com


Friday, April 26, 2013

Personal Finance News Friday 4/26

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

7 Secrets Wealthy People Know About Amassing And Maintaining A Fortune



Becoming wealthy enough to keep the wolf from your door doesn't mean an end to unwanted callers.

For every newly minted billionaire, there are cautionary tales of the well-heeled undone by visits from the the tax man, the loan officer and Uncle Sam himself.

 
A fortune requires finesse. As well as a willingness to embrace financial exotica, trips to Bermuda and the drive to start your own business--as a survey of FORBES' knowledge of the world's wealthiest people reveals. Below are seven tricks, secrets and maneuvers regularly conducted by those with more than a shekel or two to accumulate and maintain their fortunes.

[gallery2012 columns="1"]


1. Cash Flow Is Important. Buy MLPs, Sell The Steak House

Where does Brad Pitt put his multi-million-dollar paychecks? It's not too much to presume that he, like much of Hollywood, has money invested in master limited partnerships (MLPs). Conversations with five of Hollywood's top money managers revealed a cult following for these stocks, which generate strong yields and cash flow. Like real estate investment trusts, MLPs pay no taxes. Hence, they have more to share with investors, and payouts are more lightly taxed.

They're certainly more than one-hit wonders. The Alerian MLP Index's returns beat the S&P 500's on a 1-year, 3-year-, 5-year and 10-year basis. The index, holding some 50 MLPs, favors gas-and-oil infrastructure companies like Enterprise Products Partners, Kinder Morgan and Plains All American Pipeline.

Alan Goldman, a Los Angeles business manager with a star-studded rolodex and client roster, says he's often left talking his crew out of pitches on the next trendy restaurant, instead advising more consistent investments, like MLPs. "We find that they need to be more conservative than Joe Average." Goldman sighs. "The restaurants are very, very popular with entertainers. We look at something like a restaurant and just assume that the money is gone."

To read the entire article from Abram Brown | Forbes:
http://news.yahoo.com/7-secrets-wealthy-people-know-133755925.html;_ylt=AhyBGDT2umFQKd6Ly4.UFvFtzwcF;_ylu=X3oDMTNrZDJtZjU1BGNjb2RlA2N0LmMEbWl0AwRwa2cDMmZlNjE5NGMtZGI5Yy0zNjE2LTllZmEtYTMwZDUyODViMzViBHBvcwMyBHNlYwNmYmFyLWZlYQR2ZXIDZTY1ZTYwOTAtYWQwNi0xMWUyLWJmYjctNjU2OTg3OTY5OWEx;_ylg=X3oDMTFtcjhqZXZ2BGxhbmcDZW4tVVMEcHN0YWlkAzZhNmM4MWUyLTcxNzgtM2JkMC04YjZiLTAzYTI0M2E1NDEyMg--;_ylv=3




Thursday, April 25, 2013

Personal Finance News Thursday 4/25

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

How We Got Out of $50,000 Worth of Debt



Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Personal Finance News Wednesday 4/24

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:
The Dumbest Things You Can Do With Your Money



Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Personal Finance News Tuesday 4/23

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

How Extreme Savers Can Retire By 40



Monday, April 22, 2013

Personal Finance News Monday 4/22

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

The Key to Saving: Track Your Spending

By Gerri Detweiler | Credit.com 

Can something that takes as little as five minutes a day change your financial life? Absolutely, say the proponents of that so-often-recommended piece of financial advice: track your spending. They believe it can be the key to a wealthier life, and research shows it may make you healthier as well.

There’s no doubt that tracking what you are spending can help you get a better handle on where you spend your money. The insights you gain — I spent how much on that? — may prompt you to curb your behavior in order to achieve your bigger financial goals.

Two years before they quit their jobs to take their dream trip around the world, Warren and Betsy Talbot started carefully keeping track of every penny they spent.

“Right after we started tracking our expenses we sat down for our monthly review together and discovered that our #1 expense after the mortgage was eating out,” says Warren. “We found we were spending $1,500 per month on all our dining out. Just by cutting this back to $500 month we were able to save over $24,000 in 2 years, which ended up being the same amount we spent in our first year traveling full time around the world.”

[Related Article: How to Live Like a Money Expert]

It’s About More Than Money

But what if tracking your spending did more than just shed light on where your money is going? In his book, The Power of Habit, Charles Duhigg shares research by two Australian researchers, Ken Cheng and Megan Oaten, who designed a four-month experiment where participants were instructed to write down every purchase. It took some time to get into the habit of recording expenses, but once they did, there were some surprising results.

To read the entire article from Gerri Detweiler | Credit.com:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/key-saving-track-spending-060136567.html

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
Life may not be the party we hoped for, but while we’re here we should dance. -Anonymous

Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com



Saturday, April 20, 2013

Personal Finance News Saturday 4/20

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Visualize Success

Friday, April 19, 2013

Personal Finance News Friday 4/19

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

5 of the Worst Things You Can Do With Your Money


Thursday, April 18, 2013

Personal Finance News Thursday 4/18

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Spring Cleaning for Your Finances

By Benjamin Feldman | Credit.com 

Spring has traditionally been a time for cleaning our homes and clearing away the clutter that has accumulated throughout the winter. It’s a satisfying approach to the season because it gives us the feeling of starting fresh. There’s no better way to put a spring in your step (no pun intended) than by freeing yourself of unnecessary messes.

And that is true for your finances as well. So why not embrace the concept of a financial spring cleaning this year? Below, we’ll look at ways you can organize your financial life to make sure the rest of your year is as peaceful and prosperous as you’d like.

Organize Your Debt Repayment

It’s safe to say that none of us want to be in debt, and yet for those of us who have debt it can be exceptionally difficult to conquer it once and for all. So why not take this opportunity here at the beginning of spring to organize your debt and make a clear plan for paying it off?

The thing about being in debt is that you often get overwhelmed by the numerous bills, statements, due dates, interest rates and fees. This clutter of paper and percentages and numbers can wear you down.

That’s why a spring cleaning is necessary. Take all your debt accounts (student loans, credit cards, auto loan, etc.) and write down your total balances for each one as well as the interest rate for each one. It might look something like this:
  • Sallie Mae Student Loan: $9,000 (6% interest rate)
  • Bank of America Credit Card: $2,000 (15% interest rate)
  • Macy’s Credit Card: $550 (12% interest rate)
Next, compare the minimum payments and make a plan for how you are going to pay off all the debts. Decide how much you can afford to pay above the total monthly payments and resolve to dedicate the extra towards the debt with the highest interest rate.

To read the entire article from Benjamin Feldman | Credit.com:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/spring-cleaning-organize-finances-060137286.html


Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot & hang on. -Franklin D. Roosevelt

Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com.



 



Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Personal Finance News Wednesday 4/17

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

How to Make This Year's Vacation the Best
From Dave Ramsey.com

Don’t you just hate vacation?

If you’re on the beach, sand gets in everything. If you’re in the mountains, bugs fly into your mouth while you’re hiking up a four-mile trail. If you go somewhere like Disney World, you probably feel like you walked 47 miles just to see a bunch of dwarves.

Yeah, vacation is for the birds. Unless you’re a bird, in which case we say: “Welcome to daveramsey.com. As a bird, you should most certainly be debt-free, but we’d love to help you build your investments—your ‘nest egg,’ if you will.”

Wait a minute. You like vacation? Are you serious? You like all that sand in your ear canal and those bugs in your molars? You don’t mind the extravagant walks and two-hour lines for a photo with a bearded dwarf?

Well, we should’ve known. Actually, we love vacation too. It’s our favorite.

To read the entire article from Dave Ramsey.com:
http://www.daveramsey.com/blog/how-to-make-this-vacation-the-best

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
I can't believe that God put us on this earth to be ordinary. -Lou Holtz


Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com.         





 

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Personal Finance News Tuesday 4/16

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Best retirement move almost nobody makes

Experts say more savers should roll plans into their new job’s 401(k)

By Ian Salisbury/MarketWatch

When it comes to rolling over retirement accounts, a new government report suggests that job switchers are ignoring what may be their best option: Pouring savings into a new employer’s 401(k).

For many investors, the term “rollover” is synonymous with moving money from an employer-sponsored plan like a 401(k) into an individual retirement account. But it is also an option to move those assets sitting in an old 401(k)—or other defined-contribution plan like a 403(b)—into a similar plan at the new job.

New research from Congress’s investigative arm, the Government Accountability Office, suggests that paperwork hassles and a hard sell from IRA providers mean investors too frequently overlook the latter option. “It’s unnecessarily hard to do the right thing,” says Alison Borland, a retirement strategist at benefits company Aon Hewitt, which estimates that investors roll $9 into IRAs for every $1 that goes into a new 401(k).

Investing pros agree that cashing out retirement savings is almost never wise. But there are benefits to both of the other alternatives: IRAs typically offer a wider range of investment options, while 401(k) plans offer lower costs, particularly if they are sponsored by a big employer.

To read the entire article from Ian Salisbury/MarketWatch:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/best-retirement-move-almost-nobody-makes-2013-04-15?siteid=yhoof2

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
You will never do anything in this world without courage. It is the greatest quality of the mind next to honor. -Aristotle


Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com.  
  

Monday, April 15, 2013

Personal Finance News Monday 4/15

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Tax Day Freebies and Deals

Several establishments will be offering special deals on or around April 15.

By David Muhlbaum | Kiplinger 
 
When Tax Day comes April 15, you can get a little relief from the stress of filing your return by taking advantage of freebies and special deals that companies will be offering on or around that day.

Note that while many distribute deals via Facebook, you don't have to be signed up to the service to view and download the coupons.

Want to celebrate your filing (or procrastinate some more) with a flick? Go to AMC Theatres and enjoy a free small popcorn with your movie. You can get the coupon here and it's valid for any movie between April 12 and April 15.

[More from Kiplinger.com: 61 Fabulous Year-Round Freebies]

Arby's is in its third year of offering a freebie — this year offering the choice of potato cakes in addition to curly fries. Go to Arby's Facebook page to get a coupon and enter its sweepstakes to win one of 10 $500 tax relief payouts.

Boston Market is running a "Big Rib-bate" special (get it?): Two rib meals for $10.40 on Monday, April 15. No coupon needed. This offer includes a 1/4 rack of St. Louis Style BBQ Ribs with mashed potatoes and gravy, sweet corn and freshly baked cornbread.

To read the entire article from David Muhlbaum | Kiplinger:
 

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
I dream of painting and then I paint my dream. - Vincent Van Gogh
 
Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com

 
 
 

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Personal Finance News Saturday 4/13

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

16 smart things to do with your tax refund
Consumer Reports Apr 11, 2013 8:00 AM
 
Spring signals the return of warmer weather, blooming flowers and trees, baseball, and more. And for many of you, it's also when your state or federal tax refund will arrive.

Truth be told, you're better off not getting a tax refund. That money going back to you means that the government took too much from your paycheck and that you need to adjust your withholding.

Still, since a tax refund is commonly seen as a windfall, we offer our suggestions for what to do with a refund. The average federal refund was about $3,000 last year; our refund recommendations range from free to pricey.

Cars

Upgrade your tires. New tires can make a measurable improvement in your car's performance and safety. When looking for new tires, focus on tires that do well in our tests for braking, handling, and resistance to hydroplaning.

Find a GPS navigator. You can get many of the same functions that the infotainment systems in new cars have buy picking up a portable GPS navigator. Basic units priced at $125 from Garmin, Magellan, and TomTom provide helpful turn-by-turn directions. For a bit more, you get free traffic information. At the high end, you'll find devices that add features such as a trip computer, Bluetooth capability, an MP3 player, and an FM transmitter.

To read the entire article from Consumer Reports:
http://news.consumerreports.org/appliances/2013/04/16-smart-things-to-do-with-your-tax-refund.html

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
Don't count the days, make the days count. -Muhammad Ali

Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com.  

Friday, April 12, 2013

Personal Finance News Friday 4/12

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

How a Tax-Refund Windfall Can Hurt Your Finances




Studies of consumer behavior show that people spend money very differently depending on how it is acquired. In a well-known "windfall" study from 1994 at University of Michigan, students who earned money the hard way, pouring tar for a summer job, spent it at the same rate as suntanned lifeguards who spent their days toiling at the beach. But cash from "windfalls" like tax refunds or other kinds of "found" money were sometimes spent twice as fast as earned money.

[Read: Good News, Bad News for Tax Refunds.]
 
For many Americans, the tax refund is the year's biggest money event, and they often use it to pay for vacations and big-ticket items because it is outside of the salary pool. It's fine to live a little, but people are living a lot longer and it's good to think about the value of money over time.

"Some people think of it as a lottery win," says tax lawyer Genilde Guerra, managing partner at Kravitz & Guerra in Hallandale Beach, Fla., who gives tax advice to many non-residents who come to this country to work. "People who move here from abroad are not used to the tax-refund system. I tell them to spend it on something good, toward a house, paying down debt, retirement. Not like everyday salary."

"It can be a negative," she adds. Some people awaiting their tax refund actually go deeper in debt as they anticipate the check in the mail and then spend the money and forget about repaying it later.

Then there is the "lost opportunity" cost to consider. For example, if you took that $3,000 and spent it all on a trip to Jamaica, you would have a lovely week of palm trees and beaches, and a week later, it will be over except for the sunburn.

Putting that amount aside in an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) would give you an immediate deduction that could reclaim as much as $1,000 in tax savings--and you still would have your original three grand. If you put it into a dividend fund or other IRA investment that pays just 5 percent, you will have a total of $6,000 in 14 years and $12,000 in just under 30 years.

To read the entire article from Richard Satran | U.S.News & World Report LP:http://news.yahoo.com/tax-refund-windfall-hurt-finances-212812886.html



Thursday, April 11, 2013

Personal Finance News Thursday 4/11

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Tired of cable? Three smart alternatives

Can't find a cable provider in your area, or simply tired of paying for cable? Good news: There are other options out there.

By Sarita Harbour | Yahoo! Homes – Thu, Mar 28, 2013
 

Are you searching for a way to watch your favorite shows, without having to pay the high price for cable TV? Whether cable is too expensive, or just not available in your area, don't despair. Cable isn't the only game in town.

Here are three options that can give you access to those shows, movies, and sporting events you just can't live without.

Option 1: Satellite

If you live in a rural area where cable television services are limited, or you're simply tempted by the thought of unlimited channels from across the world - satellite television could be a great alternative to cable.

In fact, satellites cover nearly every part of the United States, providing consumers with access to a wide range of channels and reliable coverage.

Satellite television is also a great option for viewers who prefer the traditional scheduling of cable and local television, opposed to Internet streaming options, according to Dan Faltesek, a new media communications instructor at Oregon State University.

"Satellite is a good option if you are interested in access to regular channels and access to programming that is structured into a conventional programming flow," says Faltesek. This is a huge perk when compared to Internet streaming via services like Hulu, which often has a waiting period between the time it airs on TV, and when it's available for streaming.

So, how much does satellite cost? It ranges depending on the provider. For example, Dish Network's packages start at $24.99 per month, for a promotional period of one year. To make sure you receive the best rates, make sure to do your research and shop providers.

To read the entire article from Sarita Harbour | Yahoo! Homes:
http://homes.yahoo.com/news/alternatives-to-cable-tv-011611057.html

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
The time is always right to do what is right. -Martin Luther King Jr.

Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com.


Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Personal Finance News Wednesday 4/10

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

Student Starting College This Year? A 529 Savings Plan Might Still Help. By RACHEL ROSENTHAL/Wall Street Journal            

For parents sending high-school seniors to college in the fall, here's a surprising financial tip: Contributing to a 529 plan even just months before the first tuition payment is due will qualify the account owner for a tax benefit in many states.

Adding to a 529 can lower the state taxes you owe—under certain conditions—in 34 states and the District of Columbia, according to a tally by college-planning website FinAid.org.

Make sure your plan doesn't require a minimum holding period before withdrawals to get the tax break. While most states don't require such a holding period, a handful do—like Michigan. There, the deduction of up to $5,000 per year for individuals (and $10,000 for a married couple filing jointly) is determined by subtracting distributions from the total contributions to the plan within the same calendar year. This implies you need to take the distribution in a subsequent tax year to get the deduction.
Overlooked Loophole?
Joe Hurley, founder of the website savingforcollege.com, says he wouldn't be surprised if more states add holding-period requirements because of the revenue losses states have suffered in recent years.

It's possible, he says, that most states either haven't seen this as a big issue or that they remain unaware of it.

To read the entire article from RACHEL ROSENTHAL/Wall Street Journal:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323869604578370882132838930.html?mod=WSJ_PersonalFinance_PF14 

Inspirational Quotes@Inspire_Us from Twitter:
The superior man is modest in his speech, but exceeds in his actions. - Confucius

Hi my name is Philip J. Miano and I am the founder of PJM Personal Finance and Productivity Coaching specializing in Budgeting, Debt Reduction, Bank Reconciliations, Goal Setting, Time Management, and Organizational skills. Please visit my website: http://pjmcoaching.com.         


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Personal Finance News Tuesday 4/9

Phil's Personal Finance Tip of the Day:

How to Save a lot When You Make Only a Little

By Leslie Haggin Geary | Bankrate.com 

Retirement fears may loom large when your income is small. Today, 38 percent of households say they live paycheck to paycheck, according to a study by the Consumer Federation of America and the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards. And one-third of Americans worry they'll never be able to retire, according to a survey from Pentegra Retirement Services.

"For so many Americans, planning for retirement seems too enormous to tackle, and it feels like it is already too late," says Rich Rausser, senior vice president at Pentegra. "But it's not so."

Save $15 a week for 25 years, for instance, and you'll have $62,183, assuming an 8 percent annualized return. Save $30, and that's $124,365. "When I tell people that, they're stunned," says Rausser. "You can have an amount of money you never thought you'd be able to save."

Follow these steps to save for retirement, even if you don't make a lot.

Make a budget

Say "budget," and many people run for the hills. According to Bankrate's July 2012 Financial Security Index survey, 38 percent of Americans don't track their spending.

"When I ask people, 'How do you spend your money?' they don't know," says CFP professional Dee Lee, author of "Women and Money."

"They're living with what they've got, from paycheck to paycheck. They aren't planning."

Having a firm grasp of where your money goes enables you to set some aside for emergencies and future goals. You can track your spending using apps, software such as Quicken or by hand -- with pencil and paper. The only thing that matters is developing a budget that is grounded in reality.

Start with bank and credit card statements, and keep receipts for items you pay for with cash. As you look back at where the dollars went over the past month or two, assign your spending to the appropriate category -- clothing, travel, car expenses.

Add a line item for emergencies. Generally, you'll need three to six months' worth of living expenses to pay for mishaps without reaching for credit cards or going into debt.

Your budget also should reflect your commitment to save for retirement. Don't be discouraged if you only have a little. Twenty-five dollars a week will be worth $56,669 in 20 years, assuming a 7 percent annual return. Just be sure to start. "The first dollar you save is the most valuable," says Rausser.

"Start with 1 percent, 2 percent, 3 percent of salary. Commit to a plan of auto-escalation, each year increasing to your retirement plan by 1 percent. The numbers will move."

Plug in fixed costs. It's easier to stick to spending plans when expenses are steady, so build a budget with as many fixed costs as possible. For instance, heating bills rise when the temperature drops, and air-conditioning bills climb during sweltering summers. But your bank account shouldn't be iced every time a nor'easter blows through. For a period of time, consider enrolling in your utility's budget plan, so you pay the same amount every month -- based on an average from your past use -- to avoid periodic high bills that can throw budgets out of whack.

To read the entire article from Leslie Haggin Geary | Bankrate.com:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/save-lot-only-little-070101600.html